and it steves group, the manhattan institute, has an extra very worth pointing at the differences, but you're right. taxpayers a beginning to realize this monopoly power that unions have over government which is the new frontier for them what the final frontier is really causing a rift between the rank-and-file workers in the private sector who have to pay these taxes for increased government and the rank-and-file workers in the public sector that are enjoying these benefits. it can't go on, and that was the battle in wisconsin, part of the baatle in michigan. lou: you cited a 2010 study in which you talk about the population growth of the right to work states. we are watching union states, usually high tax states. we are watching and the migration from those states. >> quite extraordinary. about 28 percent of the population lives in right to work states. by 2008 it was a 40%. it's now 43%, and it michigan becomes right to work, that means 46 percent of the population. if you had population growth in places like texas and florida in coming years we could be at 50% or higher, meaning mo